/p t k/, and most likely /b d g/ too. /p t k/ are one of those linguistic universals, and your language has a voicing distinction in fricatives, so I assume that it would also have that in its plosives.

A laughing one. The other conlang I saw with a similar consonants had almost twice that number of fricatives though.

Well I can't pronounce the /ɣ/ in rapid speech so I decided against it and had to leave out the /x/. I plan to have /ç/ as an allophone. And I couldn't have an affricatives because that would include stops.

Native: English (NW American)Advanced: Spanish Intermediate: French Beginning: Arabic (MSA/Egyptian) Some day: German